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Date: | Mon, 30 Aug 1999 17:53:33 -0400 |
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Those poets and academics (they overlap) who praise Pound
for Imagism are frequently the same who dismiss or condemn
anything of his post-Mauberley.
==DP
>this is quite true. Most people are quick to dismiss Pound. And then
>there are the poets. Last week at the Bread Loaf Writer's Conference, Alan
>Shapiro said there was no more important poetic movement in the twentieth
>century than Imagism, and quoted a poem of his to indicate near-perfect use
>of I don't remember what, sadly. And another poet there who'll be teaching
>a class on Poetics at Texas this fall told me about how he'll use Pound as
>a way to introduce Chinese poetry and poetics to the class. And yesterday
>I read an article in some journal or other that applauded the seriousness
>of Pound's love of all poetic traditions as a model for contemporary poets,
>mentioning that without him etc etc etc. I suppose Pound achieved
>something of what he wanted. The artists recognize him as one of the
>antennae of our race. To hell, then, with the bullet-headed many.
>Journalists and a lot of professors may have a hard time with his work, but
>he comes as close as I can imagine to being a poet's poet; no one who's
>ever written lines down seriously would dare consider much of his work
>a-tonal.
>
>Lucas
>
HOME:
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